Rev. George
Miller
Sept 27, 2020
Genesis 37:3-8
Here now these words from
the prophet Jeremiah-
“How
long will the land mourn, and the grass of every field wither?
For
the wickedness of those who
live
in it, the animals and birds
are
swept away…” (12:4)
Last week we began a new journey
through the Narrative Lectionary by beginning with the creation.
We discussed the claim in
Genesis 1 that we are made in the image of God.
We discussed our call to have dominion over the land, sea, and sky.
Dominion, from a UCC
perspective, means that we are called to care for creation, mindful of how we
treat our natural resources and interact with the environment.
The Old Testament writers
make it clear that both God and we have an intimate connection with the land.
The Hebrew word for soil is adamah,
and it is out of the adamah that God dips God’s hand to lovingly create us.
From adamah comes Adam.
From a biblical perspective
we are not only created from the earth, but the land is God’s nahalah,
Nahalah is the word for
inheritance. It means allotted portion.
Nahalah indicates closeness,
intimacy, ownership. Nahalah means belonging
to in the most beautiful of ways.
For example, after the
Hebrews are freed from slavery and led across the Red Sea, Miriam sings to the
Lord-
“You…planted them on the
mountains of your own nahalah, the place, oh God, that you made your home.”
(Exodus 15:17)
The land is the Lord’s, but
God is more than happy to share it with us, to say “Look at what I made for
you.”
Sadly though, humans polluted
God’s beautiful nahalah in many ways.
According to Jeremiah there
are 3 ways in which we pollute God’s nahalah.
There is the religious
way. The shrines constructed that
worship false gods; the idols we put up that we give more care to then we are
willing to show God.
Another form of pollution is
injustice. The landowners who over
charge rent, the widows and orphans who are evicted. Businesses who make it so farmers who cannot afford
supplies.
A 3rd biblical
form of pollution is political- when leaders partner with foreign powers who
seek to enslave, dominate, and pull us away from basic principles.
There is another form of pollution
that God’s nahalah experiences- relational sin; the harmful ways we treat each other.
We first witness this in
Genesis 4 when Cain kills his brother Abel in a fit of jealousy.
As scripture tells us, Abel’s
blood pours out upon the soil, forcing the earth to swallow it. Abel’s blood cries out from the ground, and
as a result Cain is driven away from the land and the soil becomes difficult to
till.
Another form of relational
pollution is in today’s story, the continuing saga of Rachel and Jacob’s
family.
Remember Rachel and Jacob?
How Jacob tricked his brother? How Jacob’s uncle tricked him into marrying the
wrong daughter? How Rachel tricked her dad
by sitting on his belongings?
Well, the family trickery
continues.
Jacob is living in the land
of Canaan. He has 12 sons from 4 different
women. Joseph, who he had with Rachel,
is his favorite.
Jacob doesn’t even try to
hide it.
He gives Joseph a fancy robe
with long sleeves, allowing Joseph to relax while everyone else labors. He uses Joseph as a spy, having him check on
his brothers to make sure they’re working in the field.
As you can imagine, this
angers his siblings, so much so, they come up with a plan- let’s kill the
dreamer and tell dad that a wild animal ate him.
They strip him of his robe,
throw him into a well, sell him into slavery, kill a goat, smear it’s blood upon
his coat, and lie to their father about their Joseph’s fate.
God’s nahalah is abused and
polluted due this family’s sins.
By placing Joseph’s body
into a well designed for drinking, they make it so the well is unclean, and no
longer a source of pure, clean water.
By selling him into slavery,
they rip him away from the beautiful nahalah he was used to and was a part of.
Third, an innocent animal is
killed, not for food, shelter, or clothes, but for no other reason than to present
a lie.
The water, the land, the
animal are all affected by this family’s dysfunction. It’s no surprise when a famine hits the land
and the family is forced to fight for their survival.
God’s nahalah. God’s heritage. Such an important part of our faith.
So much so that in Roman’s 8
Paul writes to the early church-
“Creation waits with eager
longing, for creation has been subjected to futility…
Creation has been waiting
with hope that it will be set free from its bondage and will be given the
freedom of glory…” (8:18-21)
Let that soak in and
surround you.
God’s creation, God’s
inheritance, God’s nahalah has been waiting.
Waiting with anticipation. Waiting with expectation. Waiting with hope.
Waiting for us to be mindful
of our politics. How we interact with
other nations, who we pledge allegiance too.
Waiting for us to embrace justice. Letting farmers have a fair fight. Allowing orphans and widows to have a place
to call home.
Waiting for us to drop the
false idols of the world and turn back to God.
Waiting for us to restore
relationships, mindful of how we treat one another.
In Genesis God creates the earth
and forms us from the adamah.
God grants us dominion over
the nahalah asking that we care for the earth, the sky, the sea.
Yet Cain kills Abel, Joseph’s
brothers bring him harm and not just the family suffers, but so does the land.
Human sin hurts the land
just as much as it hurts us, just as it hurts God.
But because of Jesus, and the
lessons he teaches us, the lessons we continue to learn, we are following a
different road map, a different way.
Abel and Joseph suffered at
the hands of their siblings, but in Christ we are learning a new path.
In Christ we are discovering
that we are truly all brothers, even if we come from different mothers.
In Christ we discover that
we are all truly sisters, even if we come from different misters.
As we continue to follow the
ways of Christ, the ways of prophets, the more we do justice, the more we do kindness,
the more we walk humbly, the less the earth suffers.
The more we embrace our proper
dominion, the less the earth cries out.
The more we become care
takers of Creation, the more God’s beautiful nahalah rejoices and grows in
hope.
For that we can say “Amen.”
Note: today’s message would have been impossible
without Norman C. Habel’s The
Land Is Mine- Six Biblical Land Ideologies (1995), especially chapter 5 “Land as YHWH’s Personal nahalah: A Prophetic
Prophecy”
2 comments:
Thank you for a most powerful sermon
Thank you. That means very much. Peace, Pastor George
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